Disguisting post

This is going to be a low-profile, disguisting contribution. But the situation itself is low-profile and disguisting. As you probably know, Russia decided to show a strong arm to the Ukraine recently liberated from under her influences represented by a post-soviet oligarch Yanukovytch by what we all called the Orange Revolution (when the people stated strongly that it should be up to the Ukrainians, not Vladimir Putin to decide who should be a Ukrainian president). So there is Gasprom, the Russian gas monopoly, turning the knob down and cutting of gas supplies to the Ukraine. The world expresses its discontent attitude, but as long as no serious steps are performed, Russia will stay feeling omnipotent and the Ukraine will remain abandoned. And the question is: who goes next? Poland, for her clear support to the Orange Revolution? Or maybe Western Europe running on Russian gas, as soon as "My friend Schroder" is no long a German chancellor (nota bene, taking at present a lucrative job in "My friend Putin"'s company) and, let's say, the European Union will finally decide to say a word about Russia's politics toward Chechens...? Understand me well, I have nothing against Russia itself. But autoritarian regiemes should be named and must not be supported from outside. And what is a Putinist, oligarchian system if not an autoritarian regieme?
The funniest thing is that Poland's gas supplies are not diverse - the come from one and only source and it's... guess who. Yap, that's right. Russia. For two decades our Politicians have been too busy arguing around whether secret service files should be revealed or not, to notice the simple fact. Or maybe was there somebody profitably interested in remaining by a status quo? Ukrainian cut-off can already be felt in the whole Eastern Europe. Our new government (obsessively right-winged, Russia-disliking as only a stereotypical Pole could be) claims that there is a Plan "B". I'm wondering what could it be. Maybe we'll all switch from gas to electricity (still produced from old-fashioned, ineffective, expensive and polluting coal in Poland. There is no single atomic plant in this country). Or even better: in 20's Grand Marshall Jozef Pilsudski asked citizens to give their gold to the state in order to support a value of Polish currency in the years of crisis. Why don't we take example from those years? If our politicians couldn't draw solutions for the country's energetic safety, let's launch a National Drawing Gas Campaign! Let's support our energetic system like good citizens, from bottom up, ecologicaly, expressing our devotion to the country and attitude to our politicians!Stand and fart for your country!





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